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Open Defects Detection within 6T SRAM Cells using a No Write Recovery Test Mode
Mumbai, India January 05-January 09
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICVD.2004.126096917th International Conference on VLSI ...
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Josh Yang, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Baosheng Wang, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Andr? Ivanov, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
The detection of all open defects within 6T SRAM cells is always a challenge due to the significant test time requirements. This paper proposes a new design-for-test (DFT) technique that we refer to as No Write Recovery Test Mode (NWRTM) to detect all open defects, some of which produce Data Retention Faults (DRFs) but are undetectable by typical March tests. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed technique by only applying it to fault-free memory cells and faulty cells with those undetectable defects but all the open defects are covered since our DFT technique is implemented by simply adding extra test cycles into typical March tests. Two 6T SRAM cell models, one a high-speed version and the other a low-power one, representing extreme cases according to traditional design methodologies, were designed to validate our proposed NWRTM at the circuit level. Simulation results show that our NWRTM amounts to a shorter total test time and improved open defect detection capability. In addition, in comparison to other DFT techniques, NWRTM requires the least additional design effort, and imply less area and no performance penalties.
Index Terms:
Memory testing, Open Defects, 6T SRAM, Test Time, Area Penalty, Write Recovery
Citation:
Josh Yang, Baosheng Wang, Andr? Ivanov, "Open Defects Detection within 6T SRAM Cells using a No Write Recovery Test Mode," vlsid, pp.493, 17th International Conference on VLSI Design, 2004
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